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The 12 Ways to Practice |
The 12 Ways to PracticeYou may have noticed that the above title does not say "The 12 Ways to Practice Aikido". That's because the advice below comes from a seemingly unrelated source: a lecture series given by jazz trumpet great Wynton Marsalis. The series is entitled "Marsalis on Music", and was produced by television station WNET in New York. The section of the Marsalis series from which the 12 Ways comes is entitled "Tackling the Monster". During our ongoing relationship with aikido, some may find this title applicable to their own practice. The 12 Ways to Practice:
Marsalis' advice may seem deceptively simple, perhaps even obvious. And yet, how many times during taijutsu practice, when Sensei corrects your movements, have you thought, "That's such a simple movement! I'm making it way more complicated than it needs to be"? The only place the word "think" appears in the above 12 Ways is in example #10: Think for Yourself. This does not mean think; it means "be who you are". It means take what is offered to you, and make it a part of you. Over-thinking a technique is a common part of the learning process, yet it seems to be a brick in the path to the goal of connecting your body and mind. Example #4 tells us to concentrate. Not think. For aikido, we may translate "concentrate" to mean focus. Intent. Purpose. Direction. Drawing uke into your sphere, if you prefer. When you are in the moment, the moment is all that there is.
Be Optimistic, says #11. Many of us have come to aikido after practicing other martial arts, had fun doing them, but felt something was missing. O'Sensei tells us to practice in a joyful manner, and indeed, how buoyant you feel after a good practice. But sometimes it is harder, or you are more tired, and the smiles may not come as easily. This is the time to find the joy in your practice. How many times has Sensei said "Relax"? Practice is harder when you tense up, or try to force it. Conversely, how much easier it is to put uke down when he is rigid. #5 not only says relax, but also practice slowly. This can mean physically moving deliberately, but it can also mean being aware. When you tense up and try to blast through a technique, maybe thinking that speed is the way to get the job done, all your molecules suddenly seem to have a mind of their own, going off in all different directionsand none of them the correct direction. When you relax, and become aware, and are in the moment, then all your molecules move at the same time, and in the appropriate manner.
The final bit of advice, Look for Connections, engenders a mental explosion of bright light. All the roots of aikido technique feed the same tree. During class, how often have you heard Sensei say, "Raise your bokken"? Or "Drop your hips"? Or "Capture the elbow"?
In our dojo, we've joked about numbering all the basic aikido aspects, like raise your bokken, or drop your hips, because these same themes arise during practice over and over. These connections are always there, and are what make aikido so simple, and at the same time, so much like tackling a monster. Even though the inspiration for this essay came from a jazz trumpeter, it seems like true mastery of just about any art converges on a set of basic principles. Wynton Marsalis, thank you for reminding us.
Copyright © 1999 Traditional Aikido of Sonoma. All rights reserved. |
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